Email management service Unroll.Me to close in Europe because of GDPR

The new batch of privacy related legislations that's due to roll out across Europe later this month has claimed another victim -- Unroll.Me.

The email management service, which claims to help users "clean up your inbox", has announced that it is incompatible with GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) and will therefore close down in the EU on May 23. If you live in the EU, Unroll.Me will delete your account and you'll no longer be able to use the service.

That Unroll.Me is incompatible with GDPR will come as little surprise to anyone who knows what the service is. While it bills itself as a way to "clean up your inbox", to "instantly see a list of all your subscription emails", and to "unsubscribe easily from whatever you don't want", it also uses the contents of the emails its users receive for market research and trend analysis.

Explaining why it is available free of charge, Unroll.Me says:

We don't charge you for Unroll.Me because Slice Technologies, which owns Unroll.Me, measures e‑commerce through a technology that automatically recognizes commercial emails and extracts purchase information from them.

Slice strips away personal information -- your name, email, address, anything that could identify you -- to build anonymized market research products that analyze and track consumer trends. We respect your privacy and don’t share your receipts, emails or any of your personal information with our clients as part of our business model.

This is precisely the sort of data usage that GDPR was introduced to kill off. Writing about the impending European closure, Unroll.Me says:

The EU is implementing new data privacy rules, known as General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Unfortunately, our service is intended to serve users in the U.S. Because it was not designed to comply with all GDPR requirements, Unroll.Me will not be available to EU residents. This means we may not serve users we believe are residents of the EU, and we must delete any EU user accounts by May 24. We are truly sorry that we are unable to offer our service to you.

Over on Twitter, the company is telling its European users that it hopes to be back at some point in the future as it needs more time to become GDPR-compliant:

So sorry. We have always been focused on doing right by our users, and continue to be. We hope to be able to bring our service to EU customers, with more time to comply with all of the requirements of GDPR.